Invited Commentary on McRae, et al: Outcomes Following Adoption and Integration of Robotic-Assisted Cholecystectomy for Pediatric Biliary Tract Disease: An Eight-Year, Single Center Experience. From Adoption to Integration: The Maturation of Pediatric Rob
Abstract
Robotic surgery has become an increasingly important part of pediatric surgical practice over the last two decades. Early reports demonstrated that procedures such as fundoplication, cholecystectomy, and splenectomy could be performed safely using the robotic platform, and since then the technology has expanded into more complex abdominal and thoracic operations.[1,2] While adoption in pediatrics has been slower than in adult surgery, use continues to grow as surgeons recognize the advantages of improved visualization, instrument articulation, and surgeon ergonomics, particularly in technically demanding cases.
Keywords
Robotic SurgeryPediatric CholecystectomyMinimally Invasive SurgeryBiliary Tract DiseaseSurgical Technology AdoptionPediatric General SurgeryHashtags
#RoboticSurgery#PediatricSurgery#MinimallyInvasive#CholecystectomyThis article is published on an external journal. Click below to read the full text.
Read full article ↗How to cite: GlobalCastMD. Invited Commentary on McRae, et al: Outcomes Following Adoption and Integration of Robotic-Assisted Cholecystectomy for Pediatric Biliary Tract Disease: An Eight-Year, Single Center Experience. From Adoption to Integration: The Maturation of Pediatric Rob. GlobalCastMD Medical Library. 2026-03-12. https://origin-library.globalcastmd.com/article/11672
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